April 21, 2007

The New Lynching: Why I Must Defend Don Imus

By Selwyn Duke

So Don Imus has been fired from his radio show, and all is well
in the world. We all know about the maelstrom that developed around the
aging shock jock, who has found out how loose lips sink ships, in this
case his own. But even though his is a vessel I never would have
christened, I find a certain conclusion inescapable here. I must defend
Don Imus.

Lest I be misunderstood, I have no use for the man nor any for
the rest of his ilk. I know him to be a poster boy for our cultural
decay, a man who, along with innumerable fellow babblers, disgorges
cultural effluent on a daily basis. He has been a willing participant
in the defining of deviancy downwards and I normally would not lament
his departure.

I also would criticize his comments. It’s most uncharitable to
make sport of relatively anonymous college kids and mock their
appearance. So, one may wonder, given my thorough condemnation of the
man, in what way do I defend him?

It’s very simple: What really matters with respect to this
issue has nothing to do with Imus. This is because this has everything
to do with race, but not in the way many think. It isn’t what was said
that has the sultans of slime (read: reverends without congregations,
et al.) so upset, but the color of the man who said it.

Let’s place this in perspective. We now have a society in
which virtually no comment, no matter how salacious, sardonic, crude,
rude or lewd, is out of bounds. The only restriction is that
politically incorrect people must confine themselves to politically
correct comments; politically correct people can go further and utter
some politically incorrect ones. And shock jocks and music pox,
otherwise known as rappers, regularly exercise their tongues in ways
that would make the Marquis de Sade blush. And these rappers, who,
almost to a man, would be dead or in jail if quasi-literacy and
incoherent, vulgar, hateful rambling weren’t handsomely rewarded by our
beating-a-chicken-under-the-moonlight culture, drive around in
limousines, even though no amount of money can take the gutter out of
the guttersnipe. We see people who pass themselves off as artists
creating uplifting works such as a crucifix immersed in a bowl of urine
and then demanding tax dollars as funding. We have gratuitous violence
served up with relativistic messages in movies and sexual imagery
anywhere and everywhere; it so permeates our society that now we have
fifth-graders having orgies in the classroom. Then, the Lord’s name is
regularly taken in vain on film, although no one cares about that
anymore because we now show obeisance to a new virtue, one of the
vice-ridden’s design. Of course, the aforementioned is far from
exhaustive, for how do you encapsulate a toxic culture operating 24/7
and beaming its poison to all corners of the Earth in a paragraph?
Perhaps it can be done, but it’s beyond my capabilities.

Now let’s view Imus’ comments against the backdrop of the
above. In an amateurish attempt at humor, he called some female
collegiate basketball players “nappy-headed hos.” Not nice, no question
there, but when placed in context, how bad do they seem to those who
aren’t slaves of political correctness?

I know what some are thinking. You can’t excuse bad behavior by
citing other bad behavior, and, in the same way that you apprehend and
convict the murderers you can, the thieves you can and the rapists you
can, knowing full well that others will escape justice, shouldn’t any
traditionalist welcome the erasure of one blot on the American
panorama? Doesn’t the journey toward a reclaimed culture begin with the
draining of a single cesspool? Of course we would have to start
somewhere, but the problem is that an overall war against immorality is
not the basis on which Imus has been punished. Moreover, Imus may be
replaced with someone more politically correct, but he won’t be
replaced with someone better.

And now we’re inching closer to the point. Anyone who wants to
combat immorality across-the-board will find a staunch ally in me.
However, I will not, under any circumstances, be party to a process
whereby a few politically incorrect instances of it are cherry-picked
from a sea of immorality and the perpetrators punished harshly simply
because they bear the wrong complexion.

The problem here is both simple and ominous: The firing of Imus
further solidifies the precedent stating that, with respect to freedom
of speech, the latitude one has is directly proportional to his
epidermal melanin content. Plainly speaking, a white person risks his
career when saying things for which black people are regularly given a
pass. It’s the new lynching.

I said this solidifies the precedent because it’s not even
close to the first such occurrence. Back in 1988, famous sportscaster
Jimmy “the Greek” Snyder’s career was ended when, while inebriated in a
restaurant, he asserted that blacks were better athletes and posited a
theory as to why this was so. Contrast this with the case of Dusty
Baker, a black man who, while manager of the Chicago Cubs, also said
that minority athletes enjoyed some innate advantages in the athletic
arena. Although Baker did have to endure some criticism, his job was
never in jeopardy (nor should it have been).

Getting back to Don Imus, I’ll point out that music pox and
black comedians regularly trade in bigoted, misogynistic, hateful
material that makes him look like Opie Taylor. On Hannity & Colmes
recently, they had as a guest a quite corpulent comic named Patrice
O’Neal. O’Neal, a black man, unabashedly used the word “cracker” (a
racial epithet referring to whites that is the equivalent of “nigger”)
numerous times, while Sean Hannity just sat quietly and smiled. Then
there’s the clip of black comedian Chris Rock (Michael Savage brought
it to light on his show) wherein he talks about how he hates all
“crackers” to the roar of an appreciative audience. “Oh, c’mon, Duke,
that’s just humor,” you say? Yeah, so was what Imus said.

Contrast this with how white commentators have been cowed into
not even uttering the word “nigger” for illustrative purposes; instead,
they obediently say “the ‘N-word.’” It’s something they dare not even whisper. . . .
To me, this one, solitary phenomenon perfectly epitomizes the neutering
of the white male, as we genuflect at the altar of the race hustlers.
In fact, it’s so preposterous it bears restatement: Blacks can use the
word “cracker” to demean and express hatred, but whites cannot even
utter the word “nigger” as an element of substantive commentary. I
guess this is the affirmative-action of the tongue.

Speaking of the rotten fruits of our affirmative-action
mentality, two of its worst products – and that takes in a lot of
territory – Jesse Jackson and the bovine bloviator himself, Al
Sharpton, were Imus’ two main inquisitors. I’m far from the first to
make this point, but who are these two vile, vicious, bigoted mental
midgets to be casting the first stone at anyone? Of course, many have
spoken of their hypocrisy, but as bad as it is, it must be subordinated
to something far more significant. That they apply a double standard
that benefits themselves is bad enough, but that the media apply one
that benefits them is far worse.

If we are going to root out bigots, why aren’t we applying the
attention where it’s most needed? As to this, we can add to Jackson and
Sharpton’s sins their bigoted crucifixion of the recently exonerated
and always innocent Duke lacrosse players. Let’s look at what Jackson
said shortly after the false allegation was made:

“. . . And the idea of white males fantasizing about black
women is – is quite old, quite – and quite ugly, and now quite
illegal.”

And,

“That fantasy is as old as slave masters impregnating young slave girls.”

Now, this seems curiously reminiscent of what was sometimes said
a century ago about black men lusting after white women, something now
viewed as a most egregious form of racial stereotyping. But not only
has the media not criticized the race hustler for this prejudiced
remark, it has been disseminated so little that I actually had trouble
finding the exact quotation (you have no idea how long I spent
searching for it).

Of course, this is just the latest from a man who is beneath
contempt, a creature who has made a career out of using threats and
intimidation to shake down corporations, all to enrich himself, his
family and his cronies.

Even more of a thug is Sharpton, a man who has incited riots
that have caused immeasurable pain and suffering and more than just a
few deaths – he has blood on his hands. And this isn’t the first time
he has been party to false rape allegations. In 1987 he perpetrated the
Tawana Brawley hoax, an incident in which a 15-year-old girl fabricated
rape allegations against six white men. Sharpton was only too eager to
drag the men’s reputations through the mud, which included labeling
Dutchess County Assistant District Attorney Steven Pagones a racist and
a rapist. Sharpton never even apologized to Pagones, and to this day
has not paid a price for his vicious slander. Of course, he did
disappear from public view for a spell, but like a jerk-in-the-box, he
popped back up some years later as if nothing ever happened and now is
a favored guest on many news shows. (Shame on you, Bill O’Reilly, for
giving this criminal a forum.)

Now, contrast the above with “nappy-headed hos.” Also, how
does “nappy-headed hos” stack up against Jackson’s and Sharpton’s
demonizing of the Duke boys? Imus made a rude racial comment about some
college students; the two guttersnipes participated in a lynching that
might have changed some college students’ lives inexorably. Thus, can
anyone really say the media have their priorities straight?

Some would, it appears. Dick Morris said recently that taking
Imus to task may herald a new era, one of increased civility in public
discourse. Sure, Dick, if you believe that, your former employer, Bill
Clinton, has some land to sell you in the Whitewater development.

Nothing will change, except that a further chill has been put
on the tongue, especially when it’s wielded by one bearing a
politically incorrect complexion. Yes, when you cut through all the
posturing and sanctimony, it’s obvious that what was played to
perfection here is a now old game: Beat up on whitey.